Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Aug 1962, p. 18

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18 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, August 16, 1962 ! 32--Articles for Sale BRITISH BRIEFS MAN'S or boy's CCM bicycle, new tires and tubes. condition, $15. .|Quick sale. Apply 97 Agnes Street. (nee/TARGE size | o i|year. Telephone 7: 'elephone 728-0729. GERRARD Heintzman piano, priced for 'HIGHEST prices paid for good used |furniture. Pretty's Furniture Store, now |located 444 Simcoe South only. 723-3271. Norge refrigerator, good Tr, unit overhauled last 123-1246. Kenny.|Figin motor, rene BOAT, 18 controlled, Elgin trailer, life jackets, ete. All in excel- lent condition. 728-5694. MOTOR scooter, $125 cash or best offer. Vespa scooter, 150 cc. Telephone at supper time, 723-9677. 1961 NSU motorcycle, 250 cc, $350. Call between 5 and 7 p.m. MA 3-5514. FRIGIDAIRE electric range, 3 burner, with deep fryer, timer, fluorescent 4 size oven, utility drawer, gleaming white finish, in condition $60. Telephone D. Houlden, 723-2233 be. ROBERTSON, James Melvin Entered into rest in the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital on Thursday, August 16, 1962, James Melvin Robertson, beloved gon of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Robertson, in his 76th year. Resting the Armstrong Funeral Home with memorial service in the Chapel on Sat- y, August 18. Interment Oshawa Union Cemetery, (F: Home be- 'riday.) tween 8 a.m. and 5 p.m, BOAT, Crestliner, 14 foot, 1962 model, John- IP» son motor, Tee-nee trailer. After 6 p.m. apply 736 Whitman Crescent or tele- Phone 725-7292, VACUUM cleaner repairs, all makes, parts, attachments, brushes, guaran. teed rebuilt machines. Estimates free. Rentals. Vacuum Cleaner Repair Ser. vice, 728-0591 anytime. 1962 CRESTLINER convertible with 40 lohnson and trailer, $800 GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL Kindness beyond price yet within reach of all. 728-6226. 390 KING STREET WEST LOCK'S FLORIST Funeral arrangement floral requirements for occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 ond oll down and take over payments, Tele- Phone 728-5336. BEDDING bargains at the new Wilson Furniture Company, Smooth top mat- tresses, hundreds of coils, lovely tick- ings, sale price $26.88. Continental spring filled, large assortment, many styles and sizes, complete from $28.77. Bunk beds, maple or acorn finish, com- plete with springs, mattresses, guard rail and ladder, $57.83. Spring filled mattresses from $11.88, Foam pillows, 88c. Spring filled crib mattresses, $5.88. Wilson's Furniture, 20 Church Street. MAHOGANY frames, stem, transom screws and plans for 16 ft. runabout. Telephone after 6 p.m. 728-3575. TELEVISION aerial, bought aw six months ago, $50, selling for $20. Tele- phone 725-1980. RANGETTE, love seat, three small parlor tables, trilight floor lamps, two corner wall brackets, miscellaneous kitchen utensils. Telephone 723-9290. IN MEMORIAM BENCH saw % hp motor with 8-inch cutting blade. Reasonable. Apply 741 Beaupre Avenue. BONE -- In loving memory of a dear son and brother, Brian Wayne, who passed away August 16, 1954. Two little hands are resting, A little heart is still; Our little Brian Wayne ig For us, just over the hi Ever remembered by mother, dad, sisters Moralee, Betty and Sandra and brother David. waiting ill. TREVAIL -- In loving memory of Sidney Gordon Trevail, who departed this life August 16, 1948. --Lovingly remembered by his wife and family, WALNUT dining room suite, nine Pieces, $85; two-piece chesterfield, $50; both in perfect condition. Combination Building By M. McINTYRE HOOD Special to The Oshawa Times LONDON -- More than a mil- lion workers in the building in- dustry have been given a pay increase of one penny (one cent and a quarter) an hour. The award, made by an independent arbitrator, Prof. Harold Ken- nedy, is effective from Aug. 20. It will cost the industry about $30 million a year. The workers |had asked for an increase of tw and a half cents. ' BOMB EXPLODED CATFORD, Kent -- Bomb dis- posal workers have filled in a large hole that appeared in Forster Memorial Park, Cat- ford, and which was believed to have contained an unexploded bomb. Enough metal fragments were found to convince the ex- perts that the bomb had gone off on impact. LACK OF BEDS WINDSOR -- Windsor Rural Council and the local Trades Council are joining in protest at the lack of hospital beds for ex- pectant mothers in the area. The Regional Hospital Board has told them that a scheme to provide 75 maternity beds in a hospital at Ascot will not be completed until 1975. NEW SECRETARY LONDON -- Harold Campbell, 47, the present assistant secre- tary, will be the new national secretary of the Co-operative party, the political wing of the co-operative movement. He will succeed Jack Bailey, who re-| tires later this year, after more} electric and wood stove, $20. Kitchen cabinet, $10. Telephone 725-9277. | STUDENTS, a super value, approxi-| mately 630 sheets of letter size paper (newsprint), for only $1.00. Makes won-| derful copy paper. Apply Circulation Department, Oshawa Times, or Whitby,! 1111 Dundas Street West. [34--Lost & Found | Lost |day, vicinity four corners. Telephone | 723-3339 after 5. CARD OF THANKS SHABATURA -- We wish to express | our sincere thanks and appreciation to| Telatives, friends and neighbors for kindness and sympathy shown in the recent bereavement of a dear son, Tommy Shabatura. Also we want to thank Pastor Carrol from Byng avenue Sunday School, The Bowmanville Po-| lice Department, Norhcutt and Smith| Funeral Home, Bowmanville, and those! who sent floral tributes. | --Mr. and Mrs. M. Shabatura CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING (Continued from Page 17) 32--Articles for Sale BEFORE buying or selling televisions,| furniture, refrigerators, stoves, wash- ers. Call Elmer Wilbur, CO 3-2294, STOVE, General Electric, heavy duty, four burner, in good condition, $45. Telephone Whitby MO 84908 or apply 1613 Dufferin Street, Apartment 5. BOAT, beautiful 14 foot Montreal, ply- wood, 30 hp electric start Johnson, Gagor trailer, equipment very som- ete. An excellent buy for $695. 60 Harris, five to eight p.m. DEEP freeze refrigerator and freezer 'combination, upright. In good condition, Telephone 723-9756, GE wringer washer like new, $75 cash. Eaton's Teco Deluxe Lawnmower, $10. Telephone MO 8-4616. REFRIGERATOR, General Electric, floor model, $25; chrome kitchen set, $20; kitchen cupboards, $8 each. Tele- Phone Brooklin 655-3082, SAIL boat, 19 centre board; ideal for day sailing and short overnight trips. Sleeps two, small cabin. 27 Park Road South, 728-0429. and! 1959 SCOTT 25 hp motor, boat, trailer, complete $450. Will 728-1095. APPROXIMATELY 600 square feet of used %-inch hardwood flooring. Tele- Phone MO 8-4103. TRAILER, home made, chemical toilet, phone 725-8257, LIONEL trains, electric, on 4 x 10 foot folding table, many accessories. Ampli- fier, two 12-inch speakers .Can be used for PA system. 728-3487, MOTORCYCLE BSA 1953, good condi- 'tion, reasonable. Telephone after 4.30 p.m. 725-7061. 18 FOOT cabin cruiser, 25 hp Johnson, sleep three in cabin, Tee Nee trailer, $975. Apply 118 Gladstone Avenue. sleeps five, double wiring. Tele- sell separately.| - LOST -- Orange Persian, vicinity of Rossland and Hortop. Answers to "Ginger." Telephone 723-2938. '35--Legal To: Linda Dillabough. Take notice) |that if the rent of $20 owing since/ |May 14, 1962, for room at 58 Nassau/ |Street, Oshawa, has not been paid by| |August 24th, contents of room. shall be} sold. --Corrie Van De Valk NOTICE | TO CREDITORS | | All' persons having claims against the Estote of JESSE DAVIS PETERS, late of the City.of Oshawa in the County of Ontario, Retired Machin- ist, who died on the 6th day of March, 1962, ore requir- ed to file proof of the same with the undersigned, Solici- tor for the Estate, on or be- fore the 31st day of August, 1962. After that date, the soid Estate will be distribu- ted, having regard only to the claims of which notice hos been received. Dated ot Kitchener, this 26th day of July, 1962. G. HAROLD SHANNON, Q.C., 30 Spetz Street Kitchener, Ontario, CHANGE OF NAME IN THE MATTER OF THE CHANGE OF NAME ACT, R.S.O. 1960, CHAPTER 49, AND AMENDMENTS THERE- | AND IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF STEPHEN WILLIAM YOO FOR A CHANGE OF NAME. TAKE NOTICE that His Hon- our Judge Alex C. Hall has appointed Friday, the 14th day of September, A.D. 1962 at the hour of 10:30 o'clock in the forenoon, at his Chambers in the Court House in the Town of Whitby, in the County of Ontario, for hearing the application by Stephen William Yoo of 230 Huron Street, Oshawa, Ont- ario, to change his name to Stephen William Yeo. 17" TABLE model TV, Crosley. Excel- lent condition, perfect for cottage or second set. Telephone 723-3553. FT. Woods, chest type freezer, BRUCE V. MACKEY, B.A, Borrister & Solicitor, 36% King Street East, 2 CU. A-1 condition, $275. Telephone 725-8195. OSHAWA, Ontario. SCHOOL TEXT BOOKS |BOYS FOR CANADA than 20 years in office, when he| is 65. MORE WORKING LONDON -- During the four| the number of people in civil) 38,000 to 23,995,000, the Labor) |ministry reports. This was an|Postpone [increase of 70,000 over the num-|drive was 0 |ber employed at the same date| against the refusal of the minis- last year. | PROTEST FAILED IPSWICH -- Villagers of Clay-| don, near Ipswich, protested) angrily when the British Trans-| port Commission gave notice of} senger service from its station.| But when he parish council) not a single person turned up. | CASTLE FOR $15 | SALTASH, Cornwall Sir) Hugh Foot, Britain's ambassa- dor to the United Nations, has |found himself a bargain home | in Cornwall..He has rented Tre-| ;maton Castle, near Saltash, for) $15 a week, on a 20-year lease) from the Duchy of Cornwall.| Cornwall is the Foot family's native county. | SOUTHAMPTON Forty-| eight schoolboys have sailed) from Southampton for a month's} tour of Canada. These tours are run annually by the W. H.| Rhodes Educational Trust. The| 5 ane TP ane tallies aceite mt aaa stint Trade Wages Boosted object of the tour is to give the boys an understanding of the importance and magnitude ofa Canada. FEDERATION DATE LONDON Britain and Malaya have agreed that the new Federation of Malaysia should be formed by August 31,|8 1963. It will be made up of Malaya, Singapore, Brunei,|3ov# Sarawak and North Borneo. DROVE BURNING VAN B KILSYTH, Scotland -- A van|cal P driver, Albert Peters, of Cam- den Town, drove several miles along a Scottish road, unaware that his furniture van, carrying 17 bedroom suites, was on fire. He was waved down by a motor- ist at Kilsyth, where firemen ex- tinguished the blaze. SPEED UP TRAINS BIRMINGHAM -- Trains be- tween Birmingham and Pad- dington Station are to be speed- ed up when winter time tables begin on Sept. 10. Eight serv- ices from Paddington and nine|€2* from Birmingham will cover the journey in 'less than two hours, and two will do the jour- ney non-stop in one hour, 50) ¢ minutes. JET WINS ORDERS LONDON -- The British Air-|>' craft Corporation announces that Mohawk Airlines of New|° York has ordered four 111-Jet air-buses. The order, worth $12,- 000,000 is the second from a United States airline. The order stands at 28 and sales total $120 million, although the plane's maiden flight is not due until spring. | DEFER CATTLE DRIVE BODMIN, Cornwall -- Farm- 'weeks ending on June 23, the| ers who are threatening to bring lfour weeks ending on June 23,| chaos to Cornwall's holiday trai- fic by organizing a mass cattle Lady's gold watch, Tues-|employment in Britain rose by|Grive on the A30 road across Bodmin Moor have decided to their scheme. The to be a_ protest try of transport to fence an eight-mile stretch of road across the moor. OFFER REJECTED LONDON -- A pay increase offer to 7,000 bank workers in lits intention to withdraw pas-|London and the provinces has been rejected by the National Union of Bank Employees. The |called a public protest meeting,| offer has been rejected because managers would receive a rise of only 2% pr cent, back-dated to May 31. The union wanted five per cent increase for man- agers as well as for clerks. RADIO CUT OFF ILKESTON, Derbyshire-- While cutting down ivy from a wall between the vicarage and his church, the Vicar 'of Ilke- ston, Derbyshire, cut through a relay radio cable with his sickle, and put over 200 radio receivers out of action for 24 hours, The Vicar, Rev. Arthur Robertson, said, 'The listeners were re- leased and given another two hours to choose for themselves something to do." Today's Toronto Stock By The Toronto Stock 11 Net Btock Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge G L Power 2100 $19 19 i9 G L Pow w 350 800 775 800 GN Gas Bw 265 130 130 130 Hees 200 199 185 190 Hendsht pr 40$107 107 107 Horne Pf 700 250 240 245 Imp Oil 2Z21 $45 «(44% 44% Ind Accep = 535 Ind Min 100 Inland Gas = 200 Int Nickel 782 Intpr Dis 250 Inv Syn A 130 Jett Bw LOnt Cem Stock Tor Dom 907 $59% 59 59 TFinA 200 $13% 13% 13% Tr Can PL 2150 $21% 21% 21% Trans Mt 20 $14 4 14 ™% 49% 49% 13 16 870 " Canadian ry Exchange--Aug. 16 Quotations in cents unless marked $. z--Odd lot, xd--Ex-dividend, xr--Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants, Net change is from previous board-lot closing sale. INDUSTRIALS 11 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 617 $46% 46% 464+ % $14% 14% 14% 100 235 235 5 $27%4 W% Wh + % $10% 10% 10% + % 18% 4 $18% 18% 43% 43 43 ret +1% 'a --30 Weston A West A wts Woodwd A 100 $14 OIL 1500 «5 Anchor 500 6 Bailey S A 600 735 Cal Ed 5835 $26% CS Pete 298 Cent Del 610 610 610 C Mic Mac 285 «285 «(285 140 139 140 22% 22% 22% 260 ©6260 100 $11% 11% 11% $1 uu il 14 $70% 69% 70% $6 6 6 $52% 52% 52% + % 00 145 245 245 5 100 290 290 299 +5 $16 16 16 $14% 14% 14% 38 3B 25 $: 38 $11% 11% 11% $13 $8% 5 6 23% 50 "4 59% % 67% + 5lis-- % 5% Ye 30% 1158 -- %}* 16% 92 8% 22 -- 10% 250. +15 --10 1 618 12% 1%4--% $11% 11% 11% 165 165 165 +% $26. 26 26 $41% 41% 41%--% $46%4 46% 464 --% $13% 13% 13% $17% 17% 17% $10% 10% 10% $28% 28% 2% + % 450 450 450 $12% Hom Majtrans Pac Pete Permo Place Provo Gas Quonto Ranger South U Union Oil Un Oils Yan Can Mid West Molson A Molson pr Moore Nia Wire B 10% 250 250 230 230 230 $12% 12% 12% $50 «6500650 i 70 4 12 12 930 140 6 aaaa 99 BB 6 6 +% $19% 19 19%4--% $154 15% 15% 200 200 - 200 480 420 $70 669% 69% --% $12% 12% 12%4-----% 900 $16 «15% 16 +1 $12% 11% 12%+ % 595 585 590 +5 $23% 23% 23% 5S $40% 40% 40% + % $26 2 26 $30 30 30 $18% 18 18 $17% 2 3° <4 Se Page-Hers Photo Eng Premium QN Gas Royal Bok Royalite Russell Salada Salada ws Shawin Shaw A pr Simpsons |Southam | Steel Can |Suptest ord i 4 E +10 aa 2) & & a 480 3 r) Abacus 500 Acad Uran 3000 Alba Expl 5000 Am Larder 6000 A A Atlin Ruf Bankfield Barnat Beav Lod Bethim rea Arcadia gek® 3 1500 2000 £ 3 3? & eons +% +% ageggoaan Ry. e8sn.08 gf 17% 17% Ba 11:00 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 7) 15 Cc 25% 26% +1¥ 296 29% -1 {C 4% 4% 4% $14%e 14% l4e 32 23 @ Market Listings 11:00 Net Saies High Low a.m. Ch'ge 220 665 665 665 315 305 «(315 M % 8% 8%---% 405 405 «(405 ii Net Sales High Low a.n. Ch'ge - 1500 2 2 283 +% 51000 19 «1818 + & 500 40 40 Stock Midrim Stock Bralorne 1500 "4 +1 45% +1% see S| 3 -- 1 eee 18 % 2000 5500 1000 ---% 8890 -% 1000 20100 5S 250 275 Ne ™%% 1% 7% + %|Newnor 6 8 & --2 7 6 6 mk 2% 2% %Zh+% 6 6 65 +3 |N 3 38 8 3 3 63 8 % % %--% 425 425 425 +4 +% 2 |Denison 126 126 «6126 $19% 19% 19% 19 19 19 $10% 10% 10% 00 $28 Ye 28% e+ % 4% 4% 14% + % 3 33 --% +1 +% -- %| Del =~ 00 1% i 3% % 100 "a 6700 55 52 «85 ST 1525 37 «37 (37 1000 15 (15 15 300 820 810 810 100 $24% 24% 24% (000 6 85 500 154 154 154 9 9 900 110 110 110 1000 =64 4 4 400115 115 115 1300 62 62 62 1 2000 27 a7 th Headway Hud Bay Inspirata Irish Cop Kerr Add Lab Min Latin Am Leitch Lencourt --10 +% --2 [U) +4 % 61 950 950 5000 418% 18% 184-- 3200 179 174 175 1000 12 19000 22 2000 7 1000 27 Pe it Con Bidg w 9 $3i $17% 1 38% $6 $51 $8 265 7% 17% --% 8% 8% 6% 6% + %) $1 '51 | % 8% 86+ He) 265 265 21% 55% 125% 17% 17% Gatineau GMC 214356 (56 56 Goodyear 35 $139 139 139 GL Paper 100 $17% 17% 17% Strikers Back GRAND FOR BACK "BUYS" TO SCHOOL! To Work On Housing Sites TORONTO (CP) -- Striking) bricklayers and laborers re-| turned to work on two house) construction projects Wednes-| day after reaching an under-| standing with the employer. But workers on two other projects walked out. The number of housing pro- jects held up by scattered! strikes remained at four. About 100 men are affected. j The strikes are part of a campaign by the Brandon Hail| unions -- a group of house-| building locals representing about 1,000 men, most of them| immigrants -- seeking a re-| newal of their contract with the Masonry Contractors Associa- tion, which expired Aprii 30. Leonard Eden, executive vice- president of the contractors as- sociation, said the contract has not been renewed because the association has to competé with employers who use non-union help and pay low wages. The workers who returned after striking Tuesday obtained the employer's signature on a memorandum of intent to sign) any agreement reached between Brandon Hall and the contrac- tors association. | "Head-of- 'North Gives Clue To 1951 Tragedy EDMONTON (CP)--As if in) dramatic re-enactment of a 1951) tragedy, the silent, lonely) North has given up a clue into| the disappearance of Edmonton! airman Blake MacKenzie. | But the clue, a lelier found) in MacKenzie's downed plane, has only deepened the mystery surrounding the pilot's eventual) fate. | MacKenzie's plane, missing) since January, was found by a| prospecting party near McLeod) Lake, in an isolated area south/ | Gale Damages Nina Replica SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain AP)| of Nahanni Valley, 625 miles northwest of here. The discov- ery was reported Wednesday. The letter was from MacKen- zie, who says he was not in- jured. The plane had _ been landed above the tree line on one of the many 5,000 - foot peaks which dot the area. Almost to a detail, the note matched one left 11 years ago by northern bush pilot Johnny Bourassa. In each case the pi- lot said he had stayed with the plane five days and that he was setting out on foot in a bid-to reach civilization, Both disappeared in forbid- ding wilderness while on flights between remote northern points. VIOLATED RULE Both, said veteran northern bush pilots, violated a cardinal | rule of survival in the North by leaving their planes. But in both the-Class" fashions for Back-to- School Shelter Test Pronounced Successful Goods Satisfactory Or Your Money Cheerfully Refunded. RETAILERS TO THRIFTY CANADIANS WASHINGTON (AP) -- Blink- ing in the sunlight and looking a bit pale, 99 United States/ Navy men marched out Wed-! nesday from an underground | Cotton Charmers f full-skirted, adorabl fallout shelter in which- they, in a glamourous atray of Tu : f Y SPECIAL! COTTON PRINT SHIRTS Sizes 8 to 16. Great variety of novelty patterns. 'In or Out" tailored styles; yoke; pocket. Savings-price. 1.67. SPECIAL! SPORT SHIRTS Sizes 8 to 16, Cotton-knit in horizontal stripes, as above. Back to school fav- orite. Reg. 1.99. 21% Sav- " 187 side grew cooler and ventilation! was increased. | The aim of the test was to! find whether temperatures in) summer could be held at bear-| able levels with people living, in close quarters. | A similar test last February} spent two weeks, | trimmed new styles in washable bright ging- The test of the 48- by-25-foot|} ham checks, "Dan River' plaids and "sanfor- val Hospital grounds in nearby | Bethesda, Md., was pronounced) Styles as sketched and ; ve The mercury inside at one) many others at this Spee time hit 94 degrees with 92 per] into the mid 80s as the air out-| ES In smart-for-school styles! Featured in "Drip- steel - arch shelter at the Na-/ ized" Drip-Dry plains. . a success. | 3 } i ial Money-saving price i cent humidity. Later it dropped Dry" cottons. Assortment includes" Canad- iana" prints, novelty SPECIAL! CHECK-WEAVE SLACKS Sizes 6 to 16. Of durable- weight cotton fabric, lod- en, charcoal, brown. Self- SPECIAL! "RANDOM CORD" "Sanforized". Sizes 6 - 12. Half boxer style, in brown, charcoal, loden. Reinforced SWAP COLUMN SELL THOSE SURPLUS SCHOOL BOOKS! LIST YOUR NAME -- PHONE NUMBER -- SCHOOL AN D GRADE HERE ONE INSERTION 50c Books For Sale GRADE IX Jinnie Smith, 286 Tennessee St. ED 7-8863 Grade IX (Gen,) S.C.1.T.S. GRADE X Ronald Goderich 200 Bond St. W Oshawa 725-1369 Grade X, O.C.C.I. GRADE XI GRADE XII Books Wanted GRADE IX GRADE X GRADE XII _ GRADE. XII! |A replica of Christopher Colum- bus' tiny Caravel Nina, towed back to port from its first trial run is under repair here for a symbolic Atlantic crossing to San Salvador. Its sponsors, including a re- tired Spanish naval lieutenant and an American submarine ex- plorer and treasure hunter, hope to reach their goal Oct. 12, the 470th anniversary of Colum- bus' supposed landing on the Caribbean island. Strong winds damaged the mainmast of the 30-ton, 39-foot Nina on tests off San Sebastian. But Lieut. Carlos Etayo, 42, who financed the tiny vessel, prom- ised she will be ready for de- parture from Huelva, the south- ern Spanish port from which Columbus sailed on his voyage of discovery. 35--Legal I will not be responsible for any debts contracted in my name by anyone on or after this date, August 14, 1962, with- out my written consent.--Geza Kormos, 178 Albert Street. 1 will not be responsible for any debté contracted in my name by anyone on or after this date, August 15, 1962, with- out my written consent Howard Gibson, 563 Devon Street ,Oshawa. 1,"Frederick Neil Tonkin, hereby de- clare that I will not be responsible for any debts incurred through the use of my name, unless said debts are con- |tracted by myself, Neil Tonkin, Kings- Witness ignat August, 1962, at Kingsport, Sullivan County, Tennessee. Frederick Neil Tonkin cases, discovery of the message came months after the search for their missing single-engine planes had been abandoned. The text of the message from MacKenzie, a one-time RCAF navigator, was not immediately available. It was not known in which direction he had set out or what equipment he had with him. A former co-ordinating of cul- tural affairs for the Alberta government, he was a member of a group making a travel film of the Nahanni district. He was on a 100-mile supply trip in a Cessna 180 aircraft be- tween Smith River, on the B.C.- Yukon boundary, and Mickie Lake. The location of his downed plane indicated he may have ta- |ken an alternative route to the |base camp at Mickie Lake, He |was within seven miles of his| | destination. | MacKenzie was reported over- due Jan, 5, but blizzards whip- ping the area delayed a start of aerial searching until Jan. 7. The hunt continued until Feb. {8 covering 118,000 square miles. Bourassa, a two-time winner, World War, was lost on a 200- mile flight from Bathurst Inlet south to Salmita Mines. Four months later his single-engine) Bellanca was found on the rock- strewn shores of Wholdaia lake, 350 miles southwest of his des- tination. of the DFC during the Second|Aussie-made furniture of slim, was designed to see whether) enough heat could be main- tained in a shelter from body warmth, without the use of ar- tificial heat. In that test tem-| peratures climbed as high as 83 degrees. Australia Woos Buyers At CNE TORONTO (CP) -- Australia is wooing Canadian buyers at the 1962 Canadian National Ex- hibition, This year, 51 Aussie exporters have booths in the Australian) pavilion in the Governments) Building. | Their wares are housed in surroundings of glass and sus-/ pended cubes. The glassed-in pavilion is in the shape of a flattened circle with pictures and products of Australia high- lighted on the sides of the cubes. | Newcomers at the Australian) pavilion this'year are two furni-| ture manufacturers showing off modern design, and hand-pol- ished teak wood. Along with the traditional) Australian exports of wool,| meat, and foodstuffs to Canada, are footwear, fashion goods and a knit wear for men, women,| and children. } border-prints, and popular plain colors. 5.99 values. conn AAG at points of strain, As illus- trated, only. color checks. Savings- 2.67 _price. WIN! FREE! ALL ELIGIBLE BOY'S OR GIRL'S BICYCL Value 36.99 NOTHING TO BUY Entry Forms Available In All Dept. Stores , DRAW SEPT. Sth "PARK AVE." SUEDES. Brown Suedes with cushiony soft soles and heels. Campus styling. Sizes 4 to 9. : 3.99 or plain finish, Popular colours. RINGED AND RINGLESS BINDERS -- zippered closing; choice of embossed, novelty 4.66 LITTLE BOY PULLOVERS -- Sizes 2 - 6X. Quality cotton yarns, 'fine-knit horizontal stripes. Reg- 1.00. r] SPECIAL : 11 REG. 2.99 "ORLON" SWEATERS, Little-Girl 7; Lit- tle-Boy styles 4 to 6X. Bulky knit. Smart and 1.97 proctical. ... Only. SWISS MAKE WATCHES. $8.99 - 9.99 VALUES! Styled for misses and young men in Senior High or College. Anti-Magnetic. Shock 'resist- ont. 6 99 : s 17 Jewel. tom; metal trimmed handle. Tan; natural 2 COMPARTMENT BRIEF- CASES -- Leather-drop bot- 4.88 LITTLE - BOY "LONGS" -- Sizes 3 - 6X. Corduroy. Half- boxer; zipper closing. Navy, loden, cha I, Reg. 199. speciat. NeOT "ARNEL" HALF SLIPS -- Young-Miss sizes S., M., L. Standard & 'Petite'. Trimmed with pleating and dainty lace. Reg. 1.59. SPECIAL... DOWNTOWN 21 SIMCOE ST. S. 723-2294 ZELLER'S OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 723-2209

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